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A64572 A preservative of piety in a quiet reasoning for those duties of religion, that are the means and helps appointed of God for the preserving and promoting of godliness. Namely, I. Of four Christian-duties, viz. 1. Reading the Scriptures. 2. Preparation for the Lords Supper. 3. Estimation of the ministry. 4. Sanctification of the Lords-day-Sabbath. II. Of four family-duties, viz. 1. Houshold-catechising. 2. Family-prayer. 3. Repeating of sermons. 4. Singing of Psalms. With an epistle prefixt, to inform and satisfie the Christian reader, concerning the whole treatise. By William Thomas, rector of the church at Ubley in the county of Somerset. Thomas, William, 1593-1667. 1662 (1662) Wing T988; ESTC R37887 203,614 274

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A PRESERVATIVE OF PIETY In a Quiet Reasoning for those Duties of Religion that are the means and helps appointed of God for the preserving and promoting of Godliness NAMELY I. Of four CHRISTIAN-DUTIES Viz. 1. Reading the Scriptures 2. Preparation for the Lords Supper 3. Estimation of the Ministry 4. Sanctification of the Lords-day-Sabbath II. Of four FAMILY-DUTIES Viz. 1. Houshold-Catechising 2. Family-Prayer 3. Repeating of Sermons 4. Singing of Psalms With an Epistle prefixt to Inform and Satisfie the Christian Reader concerning the whole Treatise By William Thomas Rector of the Church at Ubley in the County of Somerset Acts 2.42 And they continued stedfastly in the Apostles doctrine and fellowship and in breaking of bread and prayer With Rev. 1.10 I was in the Spirit on the Lords-day Aug. de Trin. lib. 1. cap. 3. Utile est plures libros à pluribus fieri diverso stylo non diversâ fide Etiam de quaestionibus iisdem ut ad plurimos res ipsa perveniat ad alios sic ad alios autem sic London Printed for Edward Thomaas and are to be sold at his Shop at the Adam and Eve in Little-Brittain M. DC LXII To my dearly beloved the Church and Congregation belonging to my Charge inhabiting within the Parish of Ubley in the County of Somerset Grace and Peace Dearly beloved in the Lord IT was for your sakes that I first set my thoughts on this ensuing Treatise For having lived and laboured so many years amongst you already I cannot look to abide long with you and therefore have thought it meet to do my endeavour that you may be able after my decease to have those things alwayes in remembrance which you have been formerly and continually taught Divers of which you will meet with in the reading of this Book whereof because I am willing to give you a taste I shall reckon them up unto you in that order wherein you shall find them hereafter handled First You know I have laboured much with you for the reading of Scripture and to train up your children to be able to read it Let me now leave it with you not only to set your Eyes upon this Word of God but to set your Hearts unto it and as much as in you lies to draw and win the hearts of those belonging to you to it for it is your life and their life Secondly I have taken much pains both publikely and from house to house to teach you admonish you and perswade you to a reverent receiving of the Lords Supper And now shall desire you to keep in mind that which you often have been minded of which is that they who come to that Sacrament should be before God twice the first time preparing the second time receiving Neglect not to prepare for Sermons especially on the Lords-Day but double your preparation at Sacraments because there is a double work to be done in regard of the meeting of two distinct Ordinances that is the Word and Sacrament to be partaked in together Wash your hearts as you do your Vessels every day but scour them and make them bright for the Lords use on Sabbath and Sacrament-dayes Thirdly You have heard especially in late times wherein the shameful and shameless misusing of Ministers hath enforced them to plead for their Calling I say you have heard many things to move you to a due estimation of the Ministry concerning which I shall say no more here but only this Take heed of esteeming too much of such Teachers as are not lawfully called or too little of such as are If painful teaching be not continued unto you remember you had it If it be do not despise it If you cannot have it at home be not content to be without it look not one upon another but where you see there is Corn repair thither Better stir then starve Fourthly Of our Lords Sabbath-day very much hath been spoken to you the holy observation thereof being the Seed-plot and support of all Piety It is not a day of idleness but of spiritual action And you that have need to work for your Bodies and Families all the six dayes have the more need to lay all other work aside on the Sabbath-day and to look after your souls making it your great and even your only work then to labour not after the food that perisheth but the meat that endureth to everlasting life To be very diligent all the Week-dayes and to idle out the Lords-day is to be good Husbands and bad Christians and such bad Christians are never good Husbands for they will be undone at last Fifthly You have still seen that I have made Catechising your Children and Servants one part of my work of which I shall say but a word now namely that it is so hard a thing to get any knowledge and sense of Religion into the heads and hearts of ancient people that therein all may see and you that are Parents and Housholders should take notice of it what a necessary thing it is to begin betimes with those that are young and to instruct them in that knowledge and fear of God which is the beginning of wisdom Sixthly Family-Prayer hath been often taught and sought amongst you for How can Housholders expect the protection and success of their persons and labours in the day or the safe keeping of themselves their children servants and substance in the night yea comfort and welfare day or night without God or How can they look to enjoy God without Prayer for He will be sought by the House of Israel and we may say by every house in Israel Zech. 12.12 Seventhly Repetition of Sermons amongst you hath been my continual custom that the things publikely delivered might be better understood better remembred better settled in your hearts and that the power thereof might be more and better expressed in your lives which you know hath been the usual Prayer before Repetition Lastly I have encouraged and excited you to the duty of Singing of Psalms And of late it hath been my manner in publike to give you a short Exposition of every Psalm before the singing of it that you might better understand and mind the matter contained in it Now all these things I do here recommend unto you and again s●t before you because spiritual things though delivered often to weak hearers are not quickly understood are hardly committed to memory are soon forgotten or mistaken when a printed Paper may easily be looked upon seriously thought upon and by often recourse to it a fruitful and more full use may be made of it And whatsoever the things I here communicate and do as it were bequeath to you as my dear children in the Lord shall be found in themselves yet the relation of Pastor and People under which we stand and which is now of forty and four years standing hath I trust such an endearment in it as to render what I have written more
God From God as the Author It 's he that brings men nea● to himself to do Tabernacle-work And the Commission of Gospel-Ministers is issued forth out of Christs own Charter unto whom all power is given both in Heaven and in Earth Mat. 28.18 19. And it is also for God as the end of it when David would set out the work of the Temple and speak honourably of it It 's a great work saith he for it is not for man but for the Lord God such is the wo●k of the Ministry it is to bear the name of God before the children of men and by sowing the seed of the Word to be instruments of bringing forth those fruits of righteousness that are for the glory of God Luk. 8.15 Phil. 1.11 Col. 1.6 Thus is God the Alpha and Omega of the Ministers Office 2. By th● subject matter of it for the work of a Minister of the Gospel is to preach the high hidden and manifold wisdom of God and that among those that are perfect who alone can receive are capable of such heavenly mysteries It is to preach the unsearchable riches of Christ. In sum It is to preach Christ that mens eyes may see that King in his beauty This is Angels work Luk. 2.10 11 14. yea Angels wonder and sweetest study Eph. 3.10 1 Pet. 1.11 12. 3. By the object of it as to men and that is their everlasting salvation 1 Tim. 4.16 Obad. v. 21. How did men honour in the Old Testament their temporary Saviours How have men still honoured Physitians and bodily Saviours Hence Paul was honoured with many honours Act. 28.10 If they be thus esteemed out of the principles of nature that save mens lives how much more should they be reckoned of out of the principles of grace that are Instruments to save mens souls unto which soul-salvation bodily cures do but hold the Candle to shew in a small degree how great it is as we see our Saviours own bodily healings which were but obscure expressions to mens sense of his soul-healing vertue Mat. 8.17 Thirdly It 's their work that is besides the work and worth thereof they are called to it If others uncalled to that Office do the work the honor is not due it appertaineth not to them any more then the work doth Who commends a busie body in other mens matters But if they be duly called and the Word of Reconciliation be committed unto them as the Lords Ambassadours then they are to be highly esteemed both because of the work and the right they have to administer it All this is cold comfort for such as are call'd to the Ministry and yet are careless of doing their Office for the worth is joyned to the work and the doing of the work insomuch that Idol-shepheards fall under the most heavy and dishonorable judgements And unsavoury Salt is neither fit for the land nor yet for the dunghil when it hath once lost its savour it is thence-forth good for nothing but to be cast out and trodden under foot So great is the infamy of Ministers that are the Salt of the Earth when they are quite destitute of Ministe●ial vertue Mat. 5.13 Luk. 14.35 Yet let all take heed of contemning the Office because of the person say not if you see some or many bad These be your Ministers But so manage the dis-estimation of ill-deserving Ministers as alwayes to preserve the estimation of the ever-honourable Ministry Having thus opened the Text I shall shut up all with an earnest Exhortation to Christians to make conscience of performing the duty which it doth so manifestly and fully mind them of In this Exhortation because our desire is not to have an estimation forced but flowing from light and love I shall therefore speak in the Apostles language We beseech you Brethren know those that labour among you and are over you in the Lord and admonish you Know them 1. As the great gift of Christ who when he ascended up on high gave gifts unto men Amongst the rest he gave some to be Pastors and Teachers to continue to the end of the world Not only the abilities of Ministers are Christs gift to his Church but their Office according to the old Prophesie I will give you Pastors Let none therefor call in question the wisdom or love of Christ as if he knew not what was best for his Church or were loth to give it but prize the gift for the Giver and consider how much they are like to stead you whom he hath left in his stead Christ is the great gift of God and Ministers the great gift of Christ. 2. As Ambassadours for Christ in whom God is pleased to treat with you and by them in Christs Name to offer conditions of peace unto you yea God doth as it were beseech you by us to accept of his terms and to be reconciled to himself Unto Ministers is committed the Word of reconciliation that you may enjoy and be happy in the work of reconcil●ation O How beautiful to a sin-sick-soul that labours under the sad sense of Gods anger are the feet of them that preach the Gospel of peace 3. As your great comforters in your most grievous afflictions It is the misery of misery that there is no more any Prophet but though the Lord give you the bread of affliction and the water of affliction and your Teachers be not removed into a corner but your eyes behold your Teachers how great cause is there to say Blessed are your eyes for they see and your ears for they hear M●t. 13.16 The sight of Christ in the Gospel-Ministry makes believing souls not only desirous to depart out of the wo●ld in peace but willing to live in the world in trouble Phil. 1.24 4. As your soul-guard and defence against false Teachers who like subtile Foxes deceive first and like grievous Wolves devour after A Minister is an Over-seer that people may not be over-seen and over-reached by Church-cheaters that by good words and fair speeches deceive the hearts of the simple Rom. 16.18 even as of old the Serpent beguiled Eve 2 Cor. 11.3 5. As the Chare●s and Horsemen of Israel as your Life-guard and the best Militia of the Nation who do not only prevail in the behalf of a weak Church over every Amal●k and so procure their peace but so wrestle as to prevail with God it is not hainous to say over God Hos. 12.4 in the behalf of a sinful Church and so obtain their pardon How often had Israel been burnt up by the fire of Gods anger had not Moses stood in the gap and the Ministers of the Lord wept and prayed between the Porch and the Altar The last and best refuge is Go to Isaiah Isai. 37.3 6. As the Angels of the Churches and the glory of Christ 2 Cor. 8.23 Yea the Galatians did not
afterwards being grown up and come to discover their dispositions reading Scripture hath been laid aside Catechising shaken off Noting Sermons neglected the vain fashions of the world followed and so the upshot and conclusion is the living of a dull worldly life with little sense of Religion and losing that acquaintance with God which they seemed to have or which it was hoped they would have had The Lord open the eyes of such and Blessed be God there are divers young ones that are not such After all this I shall say and may truly say with the Apostle I write not these things to shame you or as if I thought there were not the like or greater cause of complaint in other places but I write them as to my beloved Sons and Daughters to warn you and to stir up both my self and you that it may be yet better by our making the best use we can of the little and uncertain remainder of time of our being together as Pastor and People I gladly pass from this which is displeasing to me but I thought needful for you to affect you with your estate that you might never rest till you be in a good estate And come now to the third and more comfortable thing which is matter of Praising God whereof there is much and that Not only because I hope and know that the great God without whom Ministers can do nothing are nothing hath been pleas'd to make my Ministry profitable to divers neighbouring Parishes at my first coming hither less provided for but especially for the good effect of it among you of this Congregation The same Lord of the Harvest that hath brought I may say laborious preaching into this place where there was so little so long time before hath blessed it here also so far as that I doubt not divers are gone to Heaven that have enjoyed it and are going thither who now enjoy it Not so many God knows as were to be wished but so many as that it sufficiently appeareth that God had a gracious work to do when he sent his Word hither upon the souls of poor people in this place I shall not here forget that which may confirm what I have said and be a sign of the hearty entertainment of the Gospel which is That you did so generally lovingly and earnestly desire my return unto you after I had been for some longer time absent and when I was much desired otherwhere This new Invitation I took as a second Call and a new encouragement to settle with you and therefore forsaking all other I have kept my self or rather God hath kept me only unto you to spend and be spent for you Here also I do with comfort remember your greater respect to the Lords-day more knowledge of and preparation for the Lords-Supper then is to be found in every place where the Word hath been together with some more reverence of the presence and service of God in the publike Assembly you do not use to over-run the blessing as divers that make it a common but it is a very profane custom to go away before the Blessing be pronounced but abide the whole time of divine Service Jacob said I will not let thee go from me They do well that say and resolve Lord I will not go from thee before thou blesse me But amongst and above divers other things there is great cause of blessing God for your constancy in attending Gods Word and Ordinances in the late Erroneous and Congregation-scattering times wherein so many Christians have lamentably and fearfully faln from the truth and wayes of God from whom I know you have not wanted tentations to depart with them upon the pretence of greater light and more holiness from that written Word of God which they that leave or cross and contemn have no morning-light in them and with a reverend and unfained respect whereunto the greatest godliness and holiness is ever-joyned for it is a doctrine according to godliness that is which requires true godliness and stirs up and brings men thereunto But by such tentations many have departed To that God be glory who is able to keep you and hath kept you from so falling Jude v. 24 25. I have little more to say O that I could take off some of that which I have said that is all former Complaints by seeing that done at last which hath not been done at first I mean by seeing those that have lien in ignorance become at length knowing Christians those that have been worldly minded spiritual Christians those that have been loose and given to drinking sober Christians and those who have been only sober truly godly Christians O that they that are old too like Nicodemus that dreamed of entring into his Mothers womb again might be so far awakened and enlightened as to enter as it were into the womb of the Church and know experimentally what the great mystery of Regeneration means by having Christ through the travail of the Ministery formed in them to the glory of God the sealing of the Ministry and the salvation of their pretious Souls in the day of Jesus Christ unto which they do so much hasten and for which they must prepare now or perish then And to speak yet again O that you that are younger would make conscience of remembring your Creator in the dayes of your youth and make it your business to grow in grace as you grow in years not being ever the elder the lower but the taller Christian It 's a miserable thing when a young man grows in nothing but in height or in hair O how that grows in these dissolute dayes or in strength or in wit without having the wit to grow in the knowledge and fear of God I say this is a miserable and most dangerous thing for young men may die as well as old if the Tower of Siloe fall it kills the youngest on whom it falls as well as the oldest In those lead-mines wherein many of you labour how many younger and stronger men have perished on a sudden Now if they that dye whether they be old or young do not live in Jesus while they live how shall they die in Jesus when they die and then how shall they live with him when they are dead And Is it your mind that the Lord Jesus should be in one place and you when you are dead and may die to morrow in another and that a contrary place He in glory and you in torment and that for evermore Beloved I am perswaded better things of you and pray for better things in you even things that accompany Salvation though because I would have you to hear I thus speak I shall speak but once more and I hope they that hear worst will hear me Are you sure there is an Heaven Do you believe there is an Hell Do you know the Soul is Immortal and never dieth as the
another place If thou wouldest know how great advantage ariseth from divine Scripture then diligently examine what a vast difference there is in thy heart and soul when thou standest in the Church and when thou art at a Play or standest in the Theatre It s the same soul and yet h●w well is it affected in the one place and how much corrupted in the other I am the more willing to recite these things that Christians may see in these sad dayes wherein so many slight Scriptures what a reverent and honourable account there was of them yea and of the reading of them by the most eminent men in ancient times Fourthly The examples of Gods servants recorded and recommended in Scripture is a reason of reading Scripture for we may read their piety in the reading of it the Eunuch a man of so great authority under the Queen of Aethiopia and that had the charge of all her treasure yet had another treasure for sitting in his Charet he read the Prophet I saith something no doubt he understood and read that he might understand more The noble Beroeans are commended for searching the Scriptures and how shall Christians when they have heard a Sermon search the Scriptures best but by taking a Bible into their hands and reading them there How shall a thing be searched that is not viewed Unto which we may add the example of Timothy from a chila saith Paul thou hast known the holy Scriptures which knowing was in all probability by Reading as one special means Still the Scripture hath been dear to Gods dear children as being accounted better then gold or silver though never so much better then thousands Psal. 119.72 Sweeter then Honey though never so good and which drops of it self from the Honey-comb Psal. 19.10 more valuable then their food yea then their necessary food Job 23.12 See what a Reader Joshua was though a Prince Josh. 8.34 35. And amongst us Christians heretofore though now that first love be lamentably lost were inquisitive how much they should read every day that so the Scriptures might be read over in a year which shewed they were in the way to be truly good because the Scriptures make wise to Salvation and if they did read them with reverence and delight that shewed them to be good already 〈◊〉 being used as a good reason to prove the Scriptures are the Word of God because there was never any Book that had wisdom in it but natural wise men liked it unless it were Gods Book or Books framed out of that which shews that none can like the Word of God but by the Spirit 〈…〉 and that they that like it have that Spirit yea 〈…〉 it a clearer sign of grace to delight in reading 〈…〉 in hearing Sermons viz. in this respect 〈…〉 ●ermons there is a mixture of humane sufficiency and 〈◊〉 it is not so easily discerned whether that which draws the ear and heart of the Hearer be Gods Word or mans wit but to read and to be satisfied as it were with marrow and fatness with the pure Word of God who though he condescends to Readers weakness yet never condescends to their wantonness this shews a man or woman to be much after Gods heart Fifthly The efficacy of Scripture read is an effectual argument for the reading of Scripture Famous is the story of Austin whose conversion was wrought or at least compleated in this way for he on a time full of grief and lifting up his heart to God saying How long Lord How long wilt thou be angry with me Why shall not this hour put an end to my f●lthiness at length he heard a voyce as from Heaven calling to him in these words Take up and read take up and read Thereupon he took the Book opened it and read in th●t Chapter which he first cast his eye upon these words Not in rioting and drunkenness not in chambering and wantonness not in strife and envying But put ye on the Lord Jesus Christ and make no provision for the flesh to satisfie the lusts thereof and then read no further nor was there saith he any need for as he had made an end of reading that sentence all his doubts and darknesse did as by a light cast into and clearing up his heart suddenly vanish away Upon this occasion he remembred and relates the story of Antonius who happening to read some part of the Gospel was admonished that what he read was spoken to him and it was this Go sell that thou hast and give to the poor and thou shalt have treasure in heaven and come and follow me and upon this he was forthwith converted Aug. confess lib. 8. cap. 12 But we need not go further then Scripture to be perswaded of the power of Scripture being reverently read Upon the reading of the Law by Shaphan the Scribe Josiah rent his clothes and his tender heart was much humbled for his ear affected his heart and so may their eyes that read it themselves Yea in so bad a time as that was wherein Jeremiah lived yet the Princes hearing the words of the Lord read by Baruck were afraid both one and other And after they were come out of the captivity we find that all the people wept when they heard the words of the Law It 's true the sense was given and they were made to understand the reading but that hinders not the business in hand but sheweth the power of the Word when it is read with understanding and that the better it is understood the more powerful it is Now if the Word so work upon the heart when it is read by others why may not the same effect be wrought when a man reads it himself yea rather then because he may read it over and over again and hath more time to ponder upon it Hereunto we may add that when Christians heard that read which the Apostles decreed for the Churches resolution they rejoyced for the consolation And O how many in our dayes dwelling in the dust and in a most dejected condition have found themselves strangely revived by reading some place of Scripture which the hand of Providence hath directed them unto And what did the Martyrs in Queen Maries dayes for their mutual comfort but write over and over in their Letters those Scriptures that made most for consolation and constancy that by the reading of them they might hold up and hold out in their honourable but hard condition Sixthly It makes much for reading and studying Scripture that it is Gods way to blessedness for Blessed is he whose delight is in the Law of God and that doth meditate in his Law day and night Yea Blessed is he that readeth It 's true it is not only said Blessed is he that readeth but also they that hear and keep the words of that Prophesie but yet the reading is named and hath a part in the
often the same sort of food The truth is Mens fasting takes away their stomack I mean it is their not reading that makes them unwilling to read for duties well performed bring in that delight which will make them still and make them easily performed To him that hath shall be given Luk. 8.18 Lay aside therefore dear Christians all carnal excuses and do not use your Bible as you do your better clothes that is on the Lords-day and then lay it aside till the next Lords-day but look upon the words of Gods mouth as Job did that is as upon yea esteeming them more then your necessary food and that will be a motive to you to use it as you do your food to read ordinarily as you feed ordinarily that is twice a day though something may arise extraordinarily to hinder the one or the other I know there is a difference between Servants and those that be Masters of their time They that are at their own hand as they say may take a time as they please but they that are under the power of others must do as they may and yet they also though they cannot take yet should make a time that is make hard shift for a time to see what the Lord God sayes and learn to be so provident as to place themselves there where the Governours knowing the benefit of the Word themselves will therefore give those that belong unto them the more liberty to look into it I shall conclude all that I have to say concerning this argument with the adding of two Motives which the times wherein we live may much mind us of to this necessary duty of being well-read in Scripture the one drawn from our doubtful condition in this world and in this land outwardly the other from our dangerous condition spiritually The first of these the Scripture it self points unto giving this as a reason why it is a blessed thing to read and hear and keep it to wit because the time is at hand that is times will come and how near they be at any time none can tell wherein there will be so great affliction that they only will be found blessed persons who have read observed and laid up Scripture-consolations Vnless thy Law had been my delights saith David I should have perished in my affliction The later of these also the same Word of God layes before us foretelling that in the last dayes which were come then 1 Cor. 10.11 and are come much more now perilous times shall come and that in special by seducing Teachers who will certainly prevail over poor silly creatures that are ever learning for they be the hearers of many and different Teachers and desirers of new things but are never able because they take not the right course to settle but the right course to unsettle to come to the knowledge of the truth Now How shall this be helped That Paul tells us by recommending the Scriptures in the later part of the chapter as the armour and antidote in infecting and truth-resisting-times minding Timothy therefore of his knowing of them from a child which was as is shewed before by the reading of them though other means be not excluded That of our Saviour Ye err not knowing the Scriptures is a perpetual truth that is all Error ariseth from want of right Scripture-knowledge Hence Enemies to Truth and they that would draw others into Errors are very angry at Scriptures What base thoughts Papists have of them appears by their words for they call the Scriptures a cold uncertain unprofitable dumb and dead letter yea like a nose of wax that can be turned any way and be made to serve every mans purpose yea beggerly Elements and that the labour is in vain that is bestowed on them These blasphemies they belch out well knowing that their counterfeit commodities pass best in the dark and therefore the morning light of the Word is to them as the shadow of death And Hereticks generally either disclaim them in a great degree or else tamper with the divine Witnesses and handle the holy Scriptures so as to make them their own Word not Gods Word As for Sectaries their common character is that they care little for Gods Ministers the true meaning whereof is that they care little for the Word of God rightly understood and therefore have and labour with others to have low thoughts of Ministers because it belongs to their Office to give the right sense of Scripture Neh. 8.8 Mal. 2.7 Such may not for shame grosly deny and reject Scripture but let all observe whether that which they be most real in and magnifie most be not extraordinary Revelations and that which they call a light within reporting the Scriptures to be Ink and Paper as if Ink and Paper could make men wise to Salvation 2 Tim 3.15 The tru●h is there is one grand Error that rears up and bears up all other and that is a light estimation of the Word of God eminently appearing in the dislike yea in many in the formerly unheard of detestation of those whom God hath called to be the Ministers of the New Testament for the Truth of God Rom. 15 8. And let all observe that they that turn their hearts from Ministers first grow to a contempt of Scripture it self at last I shall not doubt to put all this upon the account of neglecting to read or of the negligent reading of the Word of God else would never so many Christians have run away from God and his Ordinances as in these dayes they do If any shall say they be the Bible-bearers that are fallen away for so some profane persons will be ready to scorn the Professors of Religion To this I answer That it is one thing to bear a Bible another to read it with reverence and to search it with diligence and to pray when they read for the knowledge of Gods mind in it with all humility and sense of their own weakness and unworthiness It is such and not every reading that will serve the turn I grant that Christians have brought their Bibles to Sermons but when they have done that they have not as the Beroeans did brought Sermons to their Bible but have taken Preachers words without the grounds which they brought out of Gods Word and therefore have been carryed away by the pleasing but poysoning wo●ds of contrary Teachers My advice therefore in conclusion to such Christians as are yet capable of counsel and specially to those of my own charge is briefly this As you hear with your own ea●s so see with your own eyes and be much conversant with God in the serious reading of Scripture And seeing there were never so many helps for a right understanding of Scripture as there are now by sundry sound Expositions and Annotations published of late in our own Language Do we that are able make use of such helps that so being
prepossessed with the Word of Christ dwelling ri●hly in you in all wisdom that is not only richly but rightly and in the true sense and meaning of it there may be no room for the contradictions of subtile and seducing men but such a resolute retaining of the Truth of God as may render you capable however it go with us in this Land or in this World of that heart-securing promise Because thou hast kept the Word of my patience I will keep thee from the hour of tentation that is either from being in it or from being hurt by it unto which I add that which followeth Behold I come quickly hold that fast which thou hast that no man take thy Crown Revel 3.10 11. Finally Remember that the Word of God is the food wherewith all Saints are fed both Men and Angels for even the Angels desire and stoop low to look into it 1 Pet. 1.12 and a Table is as it were spread for them in the Church by which the manifold wisdom of God is known unto them Take therefore every day some part of this heavenly Manna this Angels food to support you in the Wilderness of this World till you come to eat it new as our Saviour saith of the Sacrament that is in a new and glorious manner to partake in the life that is held out in it in the heavenly Canaan CHAP. II. Instructions for a profitable Receiving of the Lords Supper I Now come to the second thing that is Plain Instructions for a reverent and profitable receiving of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper It may perhaps seem much to some that I should be so sollicitous about this Ordinance and therefore for their satisfaction and the confirmation of the duty of Sacrament-preparation I shall give account of it in the ensuing reasons First Preparation to the Lords Supper is to be stood upon because it is very needful and suitable to the care of the Church of God in ancient and purer times that they who have not at all as yet received that Sacrament should give an account of their knowledge and faith before they receive it for though a necessary fundamental and more remote right thereunto be presupposed in their Baptism yet because they themselves were then uncapable of making any promise and profession in their own persons therefore their clear full and next right to partake in the Lords Supper ariseth from their declaration with their own mouths of their knowledge of consent unto and true purpose to perform what their Baptism bindeth them unto or was then promised by others in their behalf Without this though I grant it may be in several wayes required and performed how shall their fitness for this Ordinance we speak of be discerned or the Church whereof they are Members and with which they are to communicate be so well satisfied But in this it being learnedly and largely spoken to by others I shall not need to move any further This only I add that for the help of the weaker sort of those of whom I here speak to give a reason of their faith and fitness for the Lord Table I have composed these ensuing Directions Secondly Another reason may be taken from the weight that the Scripture lays on this work of Sacrament-preparation in 1 Cor. 11.27 28 29 30. Where may be noted first a precise Precept for Examination Let a man examine and so and not otherwise let him eat of that Bread and drink of that Cup which shews that a special distinct Preparation is required for that Bread and that Cup that is that distinct Ordinance Secondly This command is charged upon the Conscience by laying before the Unworthy Communicant two heart-affecting and affrighting things 1. On the one side the greatest sin and the most horrible guilt For whosoever shall eat this Bread and drink this Cup of the Lord unworthily shall be guilty of the Body and Bloud of the Lord. How high is that Lord How dreadful therefore is that Guilt 2. On the other side there 's the greatest danger and saddest doom For he that eateth and drinketh unworthily eateth and drinketh damnation to himself not discerning the Lords Body that is eternal damnation without repentance and temporal judgement though that be prevented For this cause many are weak and sickly among you and many sleep Thus is that great Precept of Examination before Sacrament-participation environed as it were on both hands that it may be more effectually guarded against all gain-sayers urged on all Communicants and observed by all Christians to strike into their hearts a reverence of that Ordinance Here I do not deny but there are the same things for substance set before us in regard of the hearing of the Word whilest it is said He that believeth not shall be damned Mar. 16.16 and he that heareth and lets it slip shall not escape Heb. 2.1 2 3. and therefore People had need not only to hear but to take heed how they hear and prepare for it Eccles 5.1 But yet I do not find that so much is spoken all at once and so fully spoken and so fearfully spoken concerning mis-hearing only as concerning this mis-receiving the reason whereof may be as I humbly conceive because in unworthy partaking of the Lords Supper there is a cumulative abuse or a double sin that is not only the Sacrament is abused but that Word of God also is contemned which makes it a Sacrament as also because the Body and Bloud of Christ though offered also in the Word yet are not in such a manner presented as in the Lords Supper as will further appear in the next reason Mean while to close up this Christians may consider that when God is pleas'd to speak more plainly precisely distinctly more fully and dreadfully then he justly expects that what he saith should affect us more and be of more effect with us Read Jer. 25.30 Amos 3.6.8 Deut. 1.42 43. with Numb 14.41 to the end Thirdly A serious Preparation proper to the Sacrament of the Body and Bloud of our Lord Jesus Christ is the rather urged because the same thing that is Christ with all his benefits is offered unto us in a different way in the Word and Sacrament which makes it a distinct Ordinance and so imposeth a peculiar preparation for it which I do not at all speak to set one Ordinance of God against another or to lessen the reverence of the Word Preached which is that great Ordinance of God whereby men are converted and sayed or to give way to an unprepared coming to the Word which I fear is the fault of many who seem to come with high reverence to the Sacrament but what I say is only to put Christians in mind that every distinct Ordinance of God is to have its due and distinct respect and therefore that there is some other and further good frame of heart to be endeavoured when the Sacrament is to
be received then when the Word only is to be heard and that because that I may come to the matter I intend Christ with all his benefits is offered in the Sacrament very particularly or singularly and very plainly and sensibly First There is a peculiar particularity or particular dealing and distribution in Sacrament-administration In preaching we speak generally yet comprehending particular persons but not singling them out whereas in the Sacrament Christ is offered personally that is to particular persons and is put as it were Sacramentally into every ones hand Now when God deals with particular persons hand to hand offering them so great a gift as Christ is there is therefore more reason of reverence and of care that such a gift from such a giver be not taken with unwashen hands and hearts We find that when Joseph and Esther were to appear personally before Kings he shaved himself and changed his rayment and she put on her royal Apparel And shall we make our personal approach to God without some special testimony of the low thoughts we have of our selves and the high thoughts we have of Him Well may it then be said Offer it now to thy Governour When that poor woman that was heal'd of her bloudy issue was hid amongst a great company it was well enough but when she saw she was not hid but singled out to look Jesus Christ in the face then she came trembling and falling down before him Much cause have we to do the like considering what we are and what Christ is from whose hands as it were though by the Ministry of mean men we come each of us to take into our own hands things of so high a nature Secondly In the Sacrament Christ is offered more plainly and sensibly then in the Word though in the substance both Ordinances agree Indeed in the sound of the Gospel Christ appears and is set forth to the sense of hearing by faithful Teachers very evidently and as it were to the eye but not properly to the eye as in the Sacrament for when Paul tels the Galatians that Christ was set forth before their eyes his meaning is only this that Jesus Christ was clearly held forth to them by his Preaching as that is which is set before mens eyes which shews that things exposed to the eye are most evident and most operative for it is the eye that in a more special manner affects the heart Whence it is that Moses makes this a great argument to move the people to obedience that he did not speak to them that had not seen but to such as had seen the great acts of the Lord Deut. 11.2.7 Now God offering himself to us in the Sacrament in a more plain and familiar way setting us as it were at his Table and setting before our eyes all the good things of his House this ministreth an argument of more abundant reverence for Whence was it that Moses and Joshua were commanded to put off their shoos from off their feet Exod. 3.5 Josh. 5.15 but only because God shewed himself and set himself before their eyes in a more plain and perceptible manner then at other times Unto which may be added that other command given to Moses when the Law was to be delivered Go unto the People and sanctifie them to day and to morrow and let them wash their clothes for the third day the Lord will come down in the sight of all the People Exod 19 10 11. See 2 Chron. 7.3 When they saw the fire they bowed themselves c. But before I let this pass I have two things to subjoin that I may not be mis-understood First When I say that Christ doth in a special manner appear in the Sacrament to our senses so that we may be said in a sort to see him touch him and taste him and that therefore he expects from us an answerable preparation I do not here separate the Word and the Sacrament but take in the Word with it and the Sacrament as an appendix and an additional Ordinance to it and that such an Ordinance as hath its dignity working and being in and from the Word of Institution and Promise For what 's the Seal without the Writing But as affixed to it it is of much value The pressing therefore of special Sacrament-preparation no way derogates from the Word but rather heightens the estimation of it inasmuch as the Sacrament is founded on it And yet this dependance of the Sacrament on the Word hinders not the truth of that which Calvin affirms and confirms out of Austin which is that the Sacraments have this peculiar to them above the Word that they do represent unto us to the life the promises of God even as if they were pictured in a Table before our eyes Secondly When I plead for Sacrament-reverence I am far from allowing any thing which sheltering it self under the head of an high estimation of this Ordinance ariseth from or tendeth to Superstition or any way countenanceth or cometh near unto the idolatrous worship of the Papists wherewith they deifie and defile the Sacrament All that I move for is a reverent carriage of the body an aweful frame of heart and a knowing and affectionate preparation suited and fitted to this Ordinance Fourthly The judgment of the Church of God in all ages perswades to a special care and consideration about this Ordinance scarce any Christian Church in the world in any age since Christ as a learned man observes that hath not impaled it In the ancient Church there was much strictness used and such sent away when the Communion was to be administred who had committed notorious sins and not sufficiently testified their repentance And when the Minister was about to reach out the Sacrament of the Lords Supper to the people he cryed with a lowd voyce Holy things to holy persons Accordingly our own Church ever since the Reformation hath provided that open and notorious livers should not presume to come to the Lords Table till their open declaring of their true repentance and amendment And if malice and hatred were perceived to reign betwixt any persons they were not to be suffered to partake of the Lords Table till it was known they were reconciled Thus it was formerly and of late further care hath been taken for the preventing of Sacrament-profanation and that Jesus Christ might have wise and holy Guests at his Table though Satan the Arch-Enemy of Reformation hath used all his art to pervert or frustrate such endeavours whom we hope God will out-work in his good time Now howsoever the prescripts and practise of the most eminent men in the Church of God be not a Rule to any man yet they shew what the judgment of discretion was about this Ordinance in their time which it is reasonably expected should so far prevail as to impose a modesty upon others that differ from
meetings and conferences And yet the●e also is a danger for weak Christians that have honest hearts are soon misled by men high in their parts but not right in their judgement nor low in their hearts if there be not Ministers or others sound in the faith present in the meeting to prevent infection Unto this I add That if there be indeed any private Christians that are eminently gifted the Press is open though the Pulpit be shut Thus far of the first thing that is of knowing Ministers with a knowledge of observation in regard of their calling wherein I have been more large because of the experience we have had of late of the extreme evils of arbitrary and li●entious preaching which hath fill'd the L●nd wi●h absurd and dangerous Errors from the one end of it to the other yea and other Countries also I come now to speak of the observing 2. Of their Doctrine The Apostle is plain in this when he saith Consider what I say yea our Saviour himself who saith Take beed what you hear Christians are so to heed what they hear as to search it ●s the Bereans did and finding it by search to be sound and good to hold it fast This shews Prophesying is not de●pised 1 Thess. 5.20 3. There should be an observing of their carriage of this knowledge the Apostle speaks when writing to Timothy he tells him Th●u hast fully known not only my doctrine which belongs to the former branch but also my manner of life c. And in another place Mark them that walk so as ye have us for an ensample of which this construction may be made Take it for an assured sign of good Pastors when they study to conform themselves to mine example in all things And so one good use of observing their car●iage is discovered which is thereby to be confirmed in this that they are faithful Ministers and accordingly to be respected Hi●herto of the knowledge of Observation Secondly Ministers are to be known with a knowledge of approbation And thus this word know is often used in Scripture as when it is said The Lord knoweth the way of the righteous that is approves it and David I will n●t know a wicked man that is shew him any countenance so saith Paul That which I do I know not that is I allow not In like manner the word used here doth not signifie simply to know that 's soon done but to acknowledge own them and to see that be given them every way which is due to them in their places In such a sense the original word here used is taken 2 Cor. 5.16 We know no man after the flesh that is do not esteem reckon or judge of him according to his outward and carnal relations In like sort a Minister is not to be judged of according to the outward appearance but to be known and look'd upon with all approbation in regard of his Office if he be duly called and of his doctrine if it be the Word of God and his carriage if it be according to that Word 1 Sam. 12.4 Thirdly There should be also a knowledge of imitation thus Timothy was to know Paul's manner of life or so as to imitate it and make Paul his pattern Thus all Christians are to remember and observe Church-guides so as to follow their faith and mark them so as to be like them in an holy and heavenly life Phil. 3.17 One way wherein Ministers are over their People is to go before them as good examples their Hearers therefore should hasten after them I come now to the next duty of Christians to their Ministers which is to esteem them highly in love for their works sake which yet may be comprehended under the knowledge already spoken of because a right affectionate and effectual knowledge brings forth this estimation Concerning which observe that for the degree of it it must be very high for the nature and quality of it it must be in love and for the ground of it for their works sake 1. The Degree The due esteem of Ministers appears to be great and high for it is expressed and required in very high words in the Original shewing they are to be esteemed exceedingly as the same words are translated 1 Thess. 3.10 One sayes More then exceedingly as you would say excessively not as excess is a vice but as it implies an height and exuberancy of respect That which comes nearest the l●●ter of the Text is Esteem them above that which is abundant or which most exceeds or as Beza above redundantly This high Estimation is seen and shewed in many particulars 1. In looking upon them as servants of the most high God which shew unto men the way of salvation for although those words were spoken from the Devil who neve● meant that God should be a gainer by his being a Professor yet they do as others in such sort spoken of Christ Luk. 8.28 contain in them a clear truth And the Spirit of God also speaks in Scripture of the Ministers of Christ to the same effect Mark 16.15 16. Rom. 1.1.16 Servant of the Lord is a Ministers name 2 Tim. 2.24 And to shew the way of salvation that 's his Office Luk. 1.76 77 79. 1 Cor. 15.1 2. 1 Tim. 4.16 2. In giving them reverence so it is said that the Corinthians received Titus with fear and trembling that is with mu●h reverence The titles and usage of the Old Te●tament may shew this where one P●ophet is called an honourable man 1 Sam. 9.6 another an holy man of God 2 King 4.9 And respect was shewed unto them accordingly ●n● very a bundantly 1 King 18.7 2 King 4.37 Not but that there is a difference between extraordinary Officers and ordinary and therefore we press not the same expressions of reverence but yet the Calling and substance of the Office being the same to wi● inasmuch as both are sent of God to deliver his mind and message to his people a suitable reverence is still required that is in the generality and for the reality of it In the New Testament Ministers are called Stewards and that 's an high office and Ambassadors and that 's an honorable Office especially it being in Christs stead 2 Cor. 5.20 In the Old and New Testament both the ordinary title is a man of God Now all are men of God i. e. of his making and good men more because they are twice made Ephes. 2.10 but Ministers most being not only of God by creation or sanctification but by separation and de●●gnation to a peculiar Office whe●ein their whole work is to deliver those errands and do those acts between God and man which are charged upon them by their highest Lord. Is a Minister thus a man of God then reverence the man because of the God 3. In seeking and having recourse to them
of Soul-affliction and the Sabbath of soul-delight and so there was a difference between them yet they were also so much alike that their solemn Fast-day hath the name of Sabbath imposed upon it And all their fasting dayes were separating days wherein they separated sequestred themselves not only so as not to do any sin but so as that they were also precisely required not to do any work no not to give way to their own will or find their own pleasure on the Sabbath therefore it is Gods will that we should not only watch over our wayes without but look to our wills within which as far as they are our own and not God● should not be sought or found by us or with us on that day they are on that day as other creatures to Adam not found meet companions for us but too low Gen. 2.20 In sum No self-delight is to be admitted that is against Sabbath-delight Ne diem sanctum Domini suis commaculet voluntatibus Hieron in Isa. 58. 3. Our words not speaking a word which is well explained from the words going before where our own is expressed by the supplying of the same here and saying our own words for the meaning is not on that day we should be mutes and say nothing Now our own words may be said to be of two sorts 1. Such as are simply unlawful in themselves which are evil any day and worse on that day 2 Such as are relatively unlawful that is in relation to that day as being unsutable to it and opposite to that holiness and godly communication that is required on it And that this is here comprehended for I do not exclude words simply evil but reckon them on this day most abominable I say that this is here comprehended to wit the prohibition of common as well as condemned words may appear because here is a day evidently separated and marked out from common dayes on which notwithstanding there must be none of our own that is no sinful words and therefore it 's reasonable and congruous to conceive the meaning in this place to be that we must speak none of our own words that is of our every dayes words but that a more holy and refined language is to be used on that holy day Briefly no words are to be spoken that day which are meerly our own and not some way Gods and relating to his honour and service whose day it is It is not a day to make Bargains take Accounts to talk of Kine Horses Hawks Hounds c. which on other dayes there 's liberty to do but all the leisure we have for communication or otherwise should be sanctified for the Rest must be holy the whole day Yet I do not mean that every word is unlawful on the Sabbath that is in its nature earthly or an expression of some worldly thing for our necessities require some such words and works also as are in themselves of a worldly and common nature as about Apparel and Dyet or other incidental things But that which I humbly conceive is required is this That on that day our discourse and conference generally should be of a more holy and heavenly strain and that if other working dayes words be used it may truly be put on the account of necessity mercy Christian civility tending to the honour of Religion the doing of good the winning of others to goodness or some other end fit to be intended on that day and which cannot be so well attained but in that way that is by using vulgar and common words no way to be numbred among spiritual expressions unless in regard of the end which an heart wherein there is an habit of holiness directs them unto And whosoever give themselves leave to talk of what they please assoon as they are out of Church will be like to find less good by their having been in it and less fitness to return again profitably unto it or to be about any private religious Exercise which that holy Day calleth them unto for as evil communications corrupt mens minds and manners so worldly discourse useth to make the heart more worldly and less apt for things heavenly because prepossessed with earthly which agreeing better then that which is berter with our natures the heart is therefore more hardly won from them to a due attending to and affecting of the things of God Thus this later pa●t of the verse expounds the former for he truly tu●ns not away his foot from the Sabbath who in word thought and work doth not his own will but the will of God Now all this easily passeth from the day to the way of God and that substance of Piety which is every day a necessary duty yet so as that the spiritual observation of Gods holy day is a special means thereof and help thereunto I say the spiritual observation and desire that should be observed because they who speak more meanly of the Sabbath day do seem to take the word Sabbat● in a strict sense and to mean thereby an exact but idle observing of a day of ●est without further reference and due respect to that sanctification of the Rest which the fou●th Precept plainly expresseth I say I suppose they that speak less honourably of the day of the Sabbath look at that empty Sabbatizing for otherwise if any man shall plead for a resting from sin and the practise of holiness every day with the sleighting of the weekly Sabbath as it ought to be observ'd he plainly destroys what he pretends to build and weakeneth Religion every day by weakning the reverence of that day the which Sabbath-reverence and real respect to all Religion are so linked together that howsoever there is a difference in regard of the degree yet few or none are found to regard either who regard not both As they regard not Learning that regard not Schooling nor House keeping that keep not Market-dayes so they regard not godliness any day who regard not the Sabbath-day wherein it is taught and wherein all provisions are laid up for a godly life And on the other side As they go not to School as they should but loiter there that get no learning nor spend their time well at the Market that bring home no Provision so they never keep the Sabbath day rightly whose desire and care is not to live every day religiously and Christianly I shall add only this They who carry this Text to mens general carriage say There is an allusion in it to the Sabbath-day and saying so they must needs I think grant that the Sabbath to which the Prophet alludeth had these things in it that is holiness of heart tongue and carriage as in the Epitome which are afterward to be spread forth at large in all godliness of life all the days of the week and of our life only with this difference that things lawful on other days by the allowance of Scripture and
means when they come to take them into their mouths themselves the dishonour of God may be prevented I answer 1. That if we will consider of this rightly we must set one thing against another and then it will be found that the more they that are young grow in years the more they will surely grow in corruption being left without instruction and thereby by how much they are more capable in regard of their natural understanding by so much they will be less capable of any good thing through their grown corruption 2. I answer further that Parents may and should find out wayes to frame the spirits of their children to a greater reverence when they are catechised then at other times and in other things Now it 's true that if they be very little this must needs be less done but yet it may still be in doing and something may be done in it because they understand even then what Parents say or else they would not be capable of making them reasonable answers And the more they grow up the more will this holy reverence grow up with them and in them But to the main Objection propounded I shall give a second Answer which is this Catechising is considered two wayes 1. In regard of the present action 2. As it is an Introduction and Preparation to the future and further knowledge of God Now though little ones do not at first so understand as to use with due reverence the Name and Things of God yet it followeth not that they take Gods Name in vain because they repeat good things in order to and for the gaining of such a knowledge of God and of those holy things as whereby afterward they come to use them more reverently And therein the first use of them though not so reverent hath a part as being preparatory to it and having an influence into it and working as a good means for the begetting of it As when Parents teach very little children their letters by signs and certain pretty devised sayings and resemblances which put their little ones in mind of them this is not a vanity but a way suited to their littleness to make them learn them the sooner so it is in this and the like cases For The first Rudiments are still to be taken and judged of not in a way of separation from what follows after but as a preparation to it and being so taken they are not vain but material things because they serve to very considerable ends This shall suffice for the Old-Testament The Precept prescribing Catechising in the New-Testament is laid down Ephes. 6.4 in these words And ye Fathers provoke not your children to wrath but bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. Of the precept contained in these words there are two Branches 1. Parents are warned not to abuse their office power and authority by provoking their children 2. Not to neglect to make use of it in instructing their children and both these are not without great reason mentioned For in Parents there is not only Nature and natural affection but natural corruption by reason whereof if they watch not well it will be very incident unto them to be curious yea and furious with their children that their own will may be fulfilled There is need therefore to say Provoke not And on the other side there is a danger of being too indulgent and careless to bring up children to such courses as are necessary for the knowing and doing of the will of God Hence it is that there is as much or much more need of the latter branch of the Exhortation which is But bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. The first word But serves well to joyn together the two branches of the Precept or parts of the verse for it holds fo●th a cure of the Provocation spoken of in the former part and a care of the Instruction prescribed in the latter part Do not provoke but instruct yea instruct and you wi●l not or at least you shall not have cause to provoke for a well-instructed child is in Gods way to be an obedient child and very tractable to the instructing Parents so that there shall not be any occasion of provoking from him or being provoked against him A care of the duty in the latter part of the verse will be a good prevention of the fault in the former part for thy child knowing from thee Gods mind O Christian Parent will not God blessing the instruction of which the Precept to give it giveth the hope I say he will not do contrary to thy mind if thy mind agree with Gods mind After this connecting and conjoyning Particle followeth the Precept concerning childrens nurture which Nurture howsoever in it self it comprehends good and wholsom Instruction of every kind yet the last words of the Lord fasten it on that religious nurture and admonition which is of all other the principal and of which it belongs to this place to speak Now whilest I come to the further opening of this Precept it may be noted that there are in the Original three words offered to our Observation the explaining whereof will serve for a more full discerning of what is here prescribed The first word is nourish or feed them and so it is translated otherwhere Do not provoke your children saith the Apostle but nourish them and that not only so as to give them bread and food for their bodies wherein passionate and provoking Fathers may be defective but which is here meant to supply them with soul-nourishing-sustenance or as the Apostle speaks of himself to be Soul Nurses imparting with all dearness for their spiritual good and growth the soul-sustaining Gospel of God This is indeed to bring up as our English Translation hath it well and most hopefully for their welfare The second word in the Text signifieth in general a child-like Nurture but yet there may be found and hinted in it more particularly these three things 1. It contains in a large sense all profitable instruction sutable to a childes age and state for the composing and framing of him by knowledge unto a commendable and vertuous carriage or for the doing of greater good in humane society in time to come but in this place it is to be more properly applyed to Instruction in Religion and as Paul speaks in righteousness 2. It contains correction also which is a part of good nurture for the moving and making of a child the better to mark what is taught him and for the getting out of that foolishness which is too fast bound in him Prov. 22.15 correction is the urging of Instruction 3. This word which calls Fathers to look upon their children as children and accordingly to teach them may contain in it a restraint of that provoking before spoken of for it signifieth that the nurture he gives must be a fatherly feeding of